7 research outputs found

    Comprehensive homing endonuclease target site specificity profiling reveals evolutionary constraints and enables genome engineering applications

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    Homing endonucleases (HEs) promote the evolutionary persistence of selfish DNA elements by catalyzing element lateral transfer into new host organisms. The high site specificity of this lateral transfer reaction, termed homing, reflects both the length (14ā€“40ā€‰bp) and the limited tolerance of target or homing sites for base pair changes. In order to better understand molecular determinants of homing, we systematically determined the binding and cleavage properties of all single base pair variant target sites of the canonical LAGLIDADG homing endonucleases I-CreI and I-MsoI. These Chlorophyta algal HEs have very similar three-dimensional folds and recognize nearly identical 22ā€‰bp target sites, but use substantially different sets of DNA-protein contacts to mediate site-specific recognition and cleavage. The site specificity differences between I-CreI and I-MsoI suggest different evolutionary strategies for HE persistence. These differences also provide practical guidance in target site finding, and in the generation of HE variants with high site specificity and cleavage activity, to enable genome engineering applications

    Comprehensive computational design of mCreI homing endonuclease cleavage specificity for genome engineering

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    Homing endonucleases (HEs) cleave long (āˆ¼20ā€‰bp) DNA target sites with high site specificity to catalyze the lateral transfer of parasitic DNA elements. In order to determine whether comprehensive computational design could be used as a general strategy to engineer new HE target site specificities, we used RosettaDesign (RD) to generate 3200 different variants of the mCreI LAGLIDADG HE towards 16 different base pair positions in the 22ā€‰bp mCreI target site. Experimental verification of a range of these designs demonstrated that over 2/3 (24 of 35 designs, 69%) had the intended new site specificity, and that 14 of the 15 attempted specificity shifts (93%) were achieved. These results demonstrate the feasibility of using structure-based computational design to engineer HE variants with novel target site specificities to facilitate genome engineering

    De novo design of potent and selective mimics of IL-2 and IL-15.

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    We describe a de novo computational approach for designing proteins that recapitulate the binding sites of natural cytokines, but are otherwise unrelated in topology or amino acid sequence. We use this strategy to design mimics of the central immune cytokine interleukin-2 (IL-2) that bind to the IL-2 receptor Ī²Ī³c heterodimer (IL-2RĪ²Ī³c) but have no binding site for IL-2RĪ± (also called CD25) or IL-15RĪ± (also known as CD215). The designs are hyper-stable, bind human and mouse IL-2RĪ²Ī³c with higher affinity than the natural cytokines, and elicit downstream cell signalling independently of IL-2RĪ± and IL-15RĪ±. Crystal structures of the optimized design neoleukin-2/15 (Neo-2/15), both alone and in complex with IL-2RĪ²Ī³c, are very similar to the designed model. Neo-2/15 has superior therapeutic activity to IL-2 in mouse models of melanoma and colon cancer, with reduced toxicity and undetectable immunogenicity. Our strategy for building hyper-stable de novo mimetics could be applied generally to signalling proteins, enabling the creation of superior therapeutic candidates

    A synthetic homing endonuclease-based gene drive system in the human malaria mosquito

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    Genetic methods of manipulating or eradicating disease vector populations have long been discussed as an attractive alternative to existing control measures because of their potential advantages in terms of effectiveness and species specificity(1ā€“3). The development of genetically engineered malaria-resistant mosquitoes has shown, as a proof-of-principle, the possibility of targeting the mosquitoā€™s ability to serve as a disease vector(4ā€“7). The translation of these achievements into control measures requires an effective technology to spread a genetic modification from laboratory mosquitoes to field populations(8). We have previously suggested that homing endonuclease genes (HEGs), a class of simple selfish genetic elements, could be exploited for this purpose(9). Here we demonstrate that a synthetic genetic element, consisting of mosquito regulatory regions(10) and the homing endonuclease gene I-SceI(11ā€“13), can substantially increase its transmission to the progeny in transgenic mosquitoes of the human malaria vector Anopheles gambiae. We show that the I-SceI element is able to rapidly invade receptive mosquito cage populations, validating mathematical models for the transmission dynamics of HEGs. Molecular analyses confirm that expression of I-SceI in the male germline induces high rates of site-specific chromosomal cleavage and gene conversion, which results in the gain of the I-SceI gene, and underlies the observed genetic drive. These findings demonstrate a new mechanism by which genetic control measures can be implemented. Our results also show in principle how sequence-specific genetic drive elements like HEGs could be used to take the step from the genetic engineering of individuals to the genetic engineering of populations
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